Bundy Families of
the United States - Royal & Imperial Lineage - "The Sangraal"
& "The Bloodroyal"

Joane Osborne b: 1605

Captain Thomas Harrisb:
abt 1583 in Creeksea, Essex, England & (2)Joane
Osborne b: 1605 in England arrived in 1611 on the Prosperousdaughter of:Lord
Sir Thomas Osborne (5th Baronet) - Birth: ABT. 1647 in Tickenor,
Cy Waterford, Ireland (High Sheriff in 1672. Knighted in 1679. Inherited
the Baronetcy for only two years beginning Oct 1713, when the 4th Baronet
died, until his own death in Oct 1715 & His 1st wife Katherine
(His 2nd wife Anne Ussher, had no children)son of:Nicholas
Osborne b: ABT. 1617 in Ballintaylor, Cy Waterford, Ireland (was
Clerk of the Crown) Death: ABT. APR 1695 in Cappagh, Irelandson of:Lord Sir Richard Osborne 1st Baronet (Joint
Clerk of the King’s Court Ireland 1616-29; Member of Parliament Cy Waterford
1639-49, 1661-66) b: 1593 in Of, Ballintaylor & Ballylemon, Cy Waterford,
Ireland & Mary
Carew b: 1587 in of IrelandCokayne's Complete Peerage confirms this marriage. Burke
1893 states that Sir Richard Osborne and his wife had three daughters,
but that the wife of all children was Miss Dalton; the LDS lists one daughter,
namely Grace. Burke 1999 delineates the similar 3 daughters and husbands,
as children of the heir, son Sir Richard Osborne, 2nd Baronet. They have
been placed as his children. The LDS Medieval Studies Unit details Mary
Carew as the mother of the male issue of Sir Richard Osborne, not Miss
Dalton. The Complete Parochial History of Cornwall states that Sir George
Carew & Thomasine Godolphin had two sons and three daughters. Vivian
only detailed one of these daughters.daughter of:Sir
George Carew b: 1565 in Of, Antony, Cornwall, England & Thomasin
Godolphin b: 1565 in Of, Treveneage, Cornwall, England - dau of:
Sir Francis Godolphin & Margaret Killigrew"Carew, in his survey of Cornwall, calls this gentleman
'Dr. Carew, one of the the antientest masters in chancery, in which calling,
after his younger years, spent abroad to his benefit, he hath reposed himself'.
He again mentions him thus:- 'Master George Carew, (afterwards Sir George)
in his younger yeres, gathered such fruit at the universitie, the innes
of court, and forayne travel could yeeld him: upon his returne, he was
first called to the bar, then supplyed the place of secretarie to the Lord
Chancellour Hatton; and after his decease, performed the like office to
his two successors, by special recommendation from Her Majestie, who also
gave him the prothonotaryship of the chancery, and in Anno 1598, sent him
ambassador to the King of Poland, and other northern potentates, where
through unexpected accidents, he underwent extraordinary perils, but God
freed him from them, and he performed his duty in acceptable maner, and
at this present the commonwealth useth his service as a master of the chancery'" -CokayneBetham wrote: 'George, the second son of Thomas, was
secretary to Sir Christopher Hatton, Lord Chancellor of England. This was
by the especial recommendation of Queen Elizabeth, who gave him a prothonotaryship
in the chancery, and conferred upon him the honour of knighthood (Wood's
Athena, Vol. I. col. 530) in 1597. Sir George, was master in chancery,
and was sent ambassador to the King of Poland. In the next reign, he was
one of the commissioners for treating with the Scotch, concerning a rupture
between the two kingdoms; after which he was appointed ambassador to the
Court of France, where he continued from 1605 to 1609. On his return, he
was advanced to the important post of master of the Court of Wards, which
he did not long enjoy: for it appears by a letter written by Thuanus to
Camden, in 1613, that he was then lately deceased. He married Thomasine,
daughter of Sir Francis Godolphin, great-grandfather of the lord-treasurer,
by whom he had two sons, and three daughters; Francis, the elder son was
created K.B. at the coronation of King Charles I. and attended the Earl
of Denbigh in the expedition for the relief of Rochelle, where he acquired
great reputation by his courage and conduct. He died in the Isle of Wight,
June 4, 1628, at the age of twenty-seven; Richard, the younger son, attained
only his seventeenth year; Anne, the eldest daughter was wife of ______
Rawlin; the other two died single.' [Here Betham is wrong, as daughter
Mary Carew married Sir Richard Osborne - see Cokayne's Complete Baronetage
Vol. II, p. 260-261.] --William Betham's Baronetage of England, Vol. II, Carew,
p. 286 son of:Thomas
Carew b: 1527 in Antony House, Cornwall & Elizabeth Edgcombe
b: ABT. 1532 in Of Cotehele Estate and Manor House, St. Dominick near Saltash,
Cornwall, England - daughter of:Sir
Richard Edgecombe b: ABT. 1500 in Of Cotehele Estate and Manor
House, St. Dominick near Saltash, Cornwall & Elizabeth Tregianson of:Sir
Wymond Carew b: ABT. 1493 in Antony House, Cornwall & Lady
Martha Denny b: 1505 in Howe, Norfolk - daughter
of:Sir Anthony Denny"Sir Wymond Carew, Knt of Anthony, who was treasurer
to Queen Catherine, in the time of Henry VIII and was knighted at the coronation
of King Edward, being one of the forty knights made instead of so many
knights of the bath, the time not being sufficient to perform the ceremonies
necessary to the latter creations." - CokayneBoth Westcote and the Dictionary of National Biography
state that Sir Wymond had 18 children. son of:John
Carew & Thomasin Holland b: ABT.
1478 - dau of: Roger HollandJohn Carew, Esq. of East Anthony, sheriff
of Cornwall, in the 6th Henry VIII. [1514] He m. Thomasine, daughter and
co-heir of Roger Holland, (of the noble family of Holland,
duke of Exeter) and was s. by his son, Sir Wymond Carew,
of East Anthony. who was one of the representatives of Peterborough, in
the first parliament of Edward VI son of:Alexander
Carew of Antony b: ABT. 1439 in Haccombe, Devon & Elizabeth
(Isabel) Hatch - daughter of: John
Hach & Isabel GorgesSir Nicholas Carew, baron of Carew-Castle, Montgomery
in Wales, married Joan, (Margaret, saith York, fol. 173,) daughter of Sir
Hugh Courtenay of Haccomb, and only heir of Philippa his wife, a daughter
and coheir of Sir Warren Lerchdekne, of Haccomb, knight-banneret, and of
Elizabeth his wife, daughter and coheir of John Talbot de Cestro Richardi,
second son and heir of Sir John Lerchdekne, knight, and of Cecil his wife,
daughter and heir of Jordan de Haccomb, and had issue Thomas, Nicholas,
Hugh sine prole, Alexander, William. Alexander Carew, esq., married Elizabeth,
daughter of John Hatch of Wollegh, and had issue John; who married Thomasin,
daughter and coheir of Holland, and had issue Sir Wymond Carew, knight,
and Jane married to John Floyer, of Floyer-Hayes, esq. son of:Sir
Nicholas Carew b: ABT. 1409 in Molesford, Devon & Joan
Courtenay b: 1411 in Haccombe, Devon - daughter
of: Sir Hugh Courtenay of Haccombe b: 1360 & Philippa
ARCHDEKNE b: 1386 in Lanherne, Cornwall Nicholas Carew married Joan Courtenay From their sons descended four branches of the Carew
family . . . . 1. Thomas Carew of Mohun's Ottery, Devon 2. Nicholas Carew of Haccombe, Devon (from whom John
Young and Tom Magness are descended) 3. Hugh Carew (he died without issue and his lands went
to John son of his brother Nicholas) 4. Alexander Carew of Antony, Cornwall (from whom Tim
Sandberg is descended) 5. William Carew of Bury St. Edmonds (Carew of Crowcombe,
Somerset) Joan Courtenay was
a great granddaughter of the Earl of Devon,
still today one of the riches families in England with holding of over
50,000 acres. She married secondly Robert Vere, brother of the John, Earl
of Oxford and their desendents eventually assumed the title and lands of
the Earl of Oxford. According to Genuki"HACCOMBE, 3 miles E. by S. of Newton Abbot, is a small
parish, or extra-parochial liberty, in the detached part of Wonford Hundred,
south of the estuary of the Teign. It contains only 14 inhabitants, 290
acres of land, and two houses. It is the seat and property of Sir Walter-Palk
Carew, Bart., and has been held for many generations by his family, one
of whom was created a baronet, in 1661. The present mansion, called Haccombe
House, was built on the site of the ancient hall, about 45 years ago. It
is a large plain building, standing in a well wooded lawn, at the bottom
of a gradual descent, near the church, on the door of which two horse shoes
were fastened, "in memory of one of the Carews, who won a wager of a manor
of land, by swimming his horse a vast way into the sea, and back again."
At Domesday Survey, the manor was held by Stephen de Haccombe, under Baldwin
the Sheriff. It passed successively to the Archdeacons and Courtenays.
In the 13th century, it passed with the heiress of the latter to Nicholas
Lord Carew, one of whose descendants, George Carew, was created Baron Carew
and Earl of Totnes in 1625, but, dying without issue, in 1629, his titles
became extinct. Another member of the family was created Lord Carew of
Ireland, in 1834, and of the United Kingdom in 1838. Haccombe Church (St.
Blaize,) is a small ivy clad structure, with a bell turret, and contains
some ancient monuments of the Haccombe and Carew families." [From White's
Devonshire Directory (1850)] son of:Thomas
Carew (Baron Hydron) b: 1361 in Mohun Ottery, Devon & Elizabeth Bonville b: ABT. 1362 in
Shute, Devon - daughter of:Sir
William Bonville b: ABT. 1330 in Shute, Devon & Margaret
Damarell b: 1343 son of:Sir
Leonard Carew b: 23 APR 1342 in Stoke Fleming & Alice
FitzAlan b: ABT. 1349 in Arundell, Sussex - daughter
of: Sir Edmund FitzAlan de Arundell b: 1327 & Sybil
de Montacute b: in of Donyatt, Somerset Begelly, Pembrokeshire, the manor, with the advowson
of the church, held by knight's service of William Wyndesore, who holds
it of the heir of Carew by knight's service. William de Wyndesore, son and heir of Alexander (d.1342/3)
and his wife, Elizabeth (d.1349 during the Black Death), born 1322-28,
a minor in 1342/3 but of age by 1349, became Lord Wyndesore (1383/4), married
(c.1376) Alice Ferrers, the notorious court beauty and mistress of Edward
III. He, like Sir John Carew, father of Sir Leonard Carew, served under
Lionel, duke of Clarence, in Ireland (1362-66), who had been appointed
viceroy by his father, Edward III (See his webpage within this site). William
was King's Lieutenant in Ireland 1368-1371/2 and again 1373-1376, and is
remembered as the true founder of the Irish Parliament. He held Dungarvan
and Black Castle (c.1367) in Ireland. In 1376 he was allowed to buy goods
in Ireland to provision his castles in Wales and in March 1376/77, he was
among those lord with lands in Wales who was warned of a possible Welsh
attack. son of:Sir
John Carew the Younger b: 1310 & Margaret Mohun
b: in Dunster - daughter of:John
de Mohun (Baron of Dunster) & : Christian Segraveson of:Sir
John Carew the Elder b: ABT. 1283 & Joan Talbot
- daughter of: Sir Gilbert Talbot
- (1)-Joan TALBOT: Children: Joan de CAREW, Sir John CAREW
the Younger b: 1310, Nicholas de CAREW b: BEF. 1313, (2)- Elinor
MOHUN: Children: Nicholas CAREW son of:Sir
Nicholas de Carew b: ABT. 1253 & Amicia Peverell
- daughter of:Sir Hugh Peverell
b: ABT. 1300 in Sandford, Peverell, Devon & Elizabeth (Margaret)
Cobham b: ABT. 1302 in Sandford, Peverell, Devonshire, England son of:Baron
Nicholas de Carew b: ABT. 1223 & Avice Tuitt
- daughter of: Richard TUITE b: 1199
in Manors of Kilalton, Demar and Kilster, Cy Westmeath, Ireland son of:Lord
William de Carew b: BEF. 1228 & Alice Marshal
b: ABT. 1216 - daughter of: John Marshal
& Aline de Rye b: 1173 son of:Nicholas
de Carewson of:Lord
William de Carew b: BEF. 1194 son of:Odo
de Carew (Odo de Carreu) b: BEF. 1174 & Margaret de Tancred
b: ABT. 1117 in of Boroughbridge, Yorkshire - daughter
of:Richard Fitztancred b: ABT. 1045 in Hauteville-la-Guichard,
Normandy & Adela Bussy b:
1100 Odo Carrio, now called Carew in Pembrokeshire in Wales
to whom King Richard I gave Branton, co. Devon, as compensation for the
loss of Emlyn. He granted Rebbard near Carew to the Knights Templar, 4
King John. He married Margaret, da. of Richard son of Tancred of Haversford. He died about 1202. His eldest son was William
de Carew. Odo de Carew was the eldest son of William fitz Gerald,
who succeed his father in his office as castellan of Pembroke, lord of
Carew and Emlyn. He lived at Pembroke and died there in 1173. He held 2
knights' fees in Hermitage, co. Bucks, and the Manor of Spershot, co. Berks,
9 Henry II. His wife was NOT Maria de Montgomery da. of Stephen, Constable
of Cardigan, ancestor of (Adam) Montgomery of Ireland (Sir Th. Phillipps).
NEITHER was she da. of Kingsley of Cheshire, as Berry has her. We don't
know who his wife was, but we know it was not either of these women. I have
seen a note that he married Maria, daughter of Arnulf de Montgomery and
his wife, Lafracoth, daughter of Muirchertach Ua Briain, high king of Ireland,
but have not been able to confirm. We know that William's brother, Maurice,
married Alice, daughter of Arnulf de Montgomery and his wife, Lafracoth,
so it is possible, but the other two possibilities mentioned above are
not. son of:William
Fitgerald Death: 1173 in Pembroke, Wales son of:Gerald de Windsor Death: BEF. 1136 (Constable
of Pembroke Castle) & Nesta
verch Rhys - Princess of Deheubarth - W-11 - b: abt. 1073b: ABT. 1073 - died: 1163 son of:Gerald de Windsor was son of: Walter FitzOther & BeatriceWalter fitz Other was the first recorded castellan of
Windsor Castle. He was also the keeper of the royal forest of Windsor.
At the time of the Survey in 1086, Walter held a compact group of manors
as tenant-in-chief in the counties of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire,
Middlesex, and Surrey. He also held Winchfield in Hampshire from Chertsey
Abbey and a royal manor and some woodlands at Windsor. Living in 1100,
he died before 1116, son of:Other of HaolgalanderOthoere of Haolgalander was a frequent guest of Alfred
- King of Wessex (871-99), who was "among the foremost men in his land;
even so he had not more than twenty head of cattle and twenty sheep and
twenty pigs, and the little that he ploughed he ploughed with horses. His
principal wealth was derived partly from fishing for walrus and whale but
was chiefly derived from tribute in skins and furs levied from the Lapps
who lived further north, and it was in order to dispose of these goods
that he traveled to England." There is mention on page 19 of the Brut Y Tywysogion:
Chronicle of the Princes (edited by Rev. John Williams ab Ithel) for the
year 910 . . . Nine hundred and ten was the year of Christ, when Other
came to the island of Britain.